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Xref: bloom-picayune.mit.edu rec.org.sca:32605 news.answers:4533
Path: bloom-picayune.mit.edu!enterpoop.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!usenet
From: dennis_sherman@unc.edu
Newsgroups: rec.org.sca,news.answers
Subject: rec.org.sca / Rialto Frequently Asked Questions - part01/04
Supersedes: <sca-faq/part01_721607340@athena.mit.edu>
Followup-To: poster
Date: 11 Dec 1992 06:02:38 GMT
Organization: Massachvsetts Institvte of Technology
Lines: 164
Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
Expires: 24 Jan 1993 06:02:10 GMT
Message-ID: <sca-faq/part01_724053730@athena.mit.edu>
NNTP-Posting-Host: pit-manager.mit.edu
Summary: FAQs with Answers for the Rialto - rec.org.sca and mailing
list sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu. The Society for Creative Anachronism is
an organization that studies the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and
recreates those parts we find most interesting.
X-Last-Updated: 1992/12/01
Archive-name: sca-faq/part01
Last-modified: 11/23/1992
rec.org.sca and sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu FAQ
or
Questions Frequently Asked on the Rialto
----------------------------------------
Certain topics come up again and again on the Rialto. They are good
questions, but each time they recur much net bandwidth and reader time is
spent on repetitive responses and corrections to incorrect or incomplete
answers.
This article, which is posted in several parts on a regular basis,
attempts to cover these common topics definitively and succinctly, so
that discussion doesn't get bogged down in the repetition. The complete
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list is available via FTP from
pit-manager.mit.edu in directory /pub/usenet/rec.org.sca. Those without
FTP access should send e-mail to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with "send
usenet/news.answers/finding-sources" in the body to find out how to do
FTP by e-mail.
For more complete introductions to the SCA, see the recurring postings
"Come on in -- the water's fine" (by Hal Ravn [whheydt@pacbell.com] ) and
"Life in the Current Middle Ages." (by Arval Benicour
[mittle@watson.ibm.com] ).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table of Contents (Items changed since last posting marked with *)
Part 01:
Section 1: The Rialto.
* 1.1 What is the Rialto? What's it for?
1.2 Why is it called the Rialto?
1.3 How do I post to the Rialto?
1.4 What is the SCA Digest? How do I get on/off it?
1.5 Where can I get back issues of the Digest?
1.6 Why do I see the answers before the questions?
1.7 Am I allowed to publish Rialto postings in our newsletter?
Part 02:
Section 2: Other SCA electronic sources.
2.1 Are there other SCA mailing lists?
2.2 Are there archives of SCA information?
2.3 Does anyone have a contact in...?
2.4 What are the Rolls Ethereal?
2.5 What's this alt.sca I found?
Part 03:
Section 3: Miscellaneous questions.
3.1 What does AS stand for?
3.2 Other abbreviations.
3.3 Why don't we have a badge for all the Rialto people...?
3.4 What is Period?
Section 4: Recurring events.
4.1 What is Pennsic? When is Pennsic?
4.2 What is Estrella? When is Estrella?
4.3 What is Lilies? When is Lilies?
Section 5: How do you join the SCA?
Part 04:
Guide to Posting Style.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 1: The Rialto.
1.1 What is the Rialto? What's it for?
The Rialto consists of a Usenet newsgroup, (rec.org.sca) which is
propagated to thousands of machines world-wide, and an electronic mail
digest (the SCA Digest), which is produced on a badly overworked
machine at MIT, and mailed directly to hundreds of people, also
world-wide. We are also connected to Fidonet and other BBS networks.
The Rialto exists to discuss topics of interest to the Society
for Creative Anachronism. The SCA is a non-profit, educational
organization of people that study the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and
recreate those parts we find most interesting.
1.2 Why is it called the Rialto?
The Rialto is named for a marketplace in Venice in the vicinity of
the Rialto bridge. As people gathered there to gossip and exchange
ideas, so do we gather here.
1.3 How do I post to the Rialto?
Check with your local system administrator or sysop for
instructions for your exact machine and software. Generally, you
either post a message to the newsgroup rec.org.sca, or send mail to
sca@mc.lcs.mit.edu. See Part 3 of this posting for guidelines to
posting style.
1.4 What is the SCA Digest? How do I get on/off it?
The SCA Digest is the electronic mail version of the Rialto. One
can subscribe and unsubscribe by sending email to
SCA-Request@mc.lcs.mit.edu, requesting your addition to or deletion
from the list. Expect this to take up to a week - the people running
the Digest are volunteers with other work to do. If you read
rec.org.sca, there is no need for you to subscribe to SCA-Request, as
messages are gatewayed in both directions.
1.5 Where can I get back issues of the Digest?
You may ask for back issues of any digests by writing to
SCA-Request@mc.lcs.mit.edu and specifying the date(s)/number(s) of the
issue you want mailed to you. That address is serviced by overworked
humans so expect any request to take up to a week to process. Please
be reasonable about the number of back issues you request.
("Everything up to now" is *not* reasonable :-)
1.6 Why do I see the answers before the questions?
The short answer is that messages propagate from one system to
another at varying speeds, and therefore an answer posted on a
well-connected machine may arrive at a less-well-connected machine
before the question does. The longer answer requires paying attention
to the fact that the Rialto is both a Usenet newsgroup and a mailing
list, and the gateway between them is another place where the ordering
of messages can be scrambled. There is nothing that can easily (read
cost-effectively) be done about the scrambling of message order (it
would require a complete redesign of the Usenet newsgroups, just to
start with) so please don't ask. This message scrambling, by the way,
is a good reason to paraphrase or quote just enough of the message you
are answering to make clear what you are talking about.
1.7 Am I allowed to publish Rialto postings in our newsletter?
The legalities of copyright ownership in an electronic medium
are currently murky. In countries that are signatories to the Berne
Convention (which includes the USA and Canada), text is copyrighted
from the moment of creation. However, text submitted to newsgroups
and digests _may_ be different, as it is intended for a wide
distribution. There is no clear answer in the USA at the present
time. The polite thing to do, regardless of whether a lawyer would
tell you it is necessary, is contact the author(s) of the article(s)
in question, and ask for permission to publish. Abide by their
wishes. Assuming permission is given, you (or your chronicler)
probably want to save a hardcopy of the message giving you
permission.
---------- End of Part 01 ----------
========================================================================
Thanks to all who have contributed to this article.
This article is a work in progress. If you have other topics you'd like to
see included, send me email with the question(s) and your suggested
answer(s). If you have comment on the items included, please send me
(polite) email.
PLEASE DO NOT COMMENT ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE RIALTO! ! !
The whole point of this effort is to reduce traffic. I will summarize
comments sent to me, if it seems necessary.
*--------------------------------------------------------------------*
* Robyyan Torr d'Elandris Kapellenberg, Windmaster's Hill Atlantia *
*--------------------------------------------------------------------*
* Dennis R. Sherman Triangle Research Libraries Network *
* dennis_sherman@unc.edu Univ. of North Carolina - Chapel Hill *
*--------------------------------------------------------------------*